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WEST RIDING OF Y0RK5HIRE.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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N OTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN , that a SPE € 1 AL ADJOURNED SESSIONS of the Peace for the West Riding of the County of Y « rk , "will be holden at the Cobbt House , in Wake-Fi £ U > , on Fsidat , the Tweaty-Third Day of Jume instant , at Twelve o'Clbck at Noon , to receive and take into consideration the Report of the Committee appointed at the last Pontefract Sessions , for the puxDOse of considering what measures might be desirable to adopt in order to carry out those provisions of the Statue of the 5 and 6 Viot ., c . 109 . intituled
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WEST BIDING OF YORKSHIRE . MIDSUMMER SESSIONS . NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN , that the Midsnmmer General Quarter Sessions of the Peace for the West Riding of the County of York , will be opened at Skipton , on Tuesday , the 27 th Day of June instant ; and by Adjournment from thence will be holden at Bradford , on ] Wednesday , the 28 sh Day of the same month , of June , at Ten of the Clock in the Forenoon of each of the same days ; and also , by farther Adjournment from thence , will be holden at Rotheriiam , on Monday , the 3 rd Day of July next , at Eleven of tbe Clock in the Forenoon , when all Jurors , Suitors , Persons -bound by Recognizance , and others having business at the eaid several Sessions , are required to attend the Court on the several Days and at the several Hoars above mentioned .
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LOAN- of His Royal Highness the GRAND DUKE OF HESSE DARMSTADT , ( guaranteed by the States of the Country ) of 6 Millions 500 , 000 florins , to be reimbursed l with 21 , 413 , 800 florins . Unrivalled distribution jof Prizes . 1500 Money Prizes must be obtained by tbe next drawing of this Royal Slate Loan , taking plaoe on the 1 st of Jnly , 1843 , as follows i- ^ X prize ofj 40 , 000 florins ; 1 of 10 , 000 fl ; 1 of 5 000 fl ; 1 of 3000 fl ; 6 of 1600 fl : lOof 400 fL ; 20 of 200 fl . ; 60 of 100 fi . ; 100 sf 90 fl . ; 500 of 88 fl . ; 800 of 86 fl . ; 1500 prices amounting to 259 , 800 florins . 10 fl . being equal to £ 1 sterling . Price of Bondsfor this drawing—One Bond , £ 1 ; H do . £ 10 ; 24 do . £ 20 . The Official Original List of Numbers of tbe 1500 prizes will be forwarded to tbe Shareholders immediately after the drawing . Tbe amount of prizes will be paid in cash at Frankforton-the-Malne , and London .
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READ AND JUDGE ! ADMTrrED XJSDEB FIFTY TEABS OF AGS THE FIHST JOKE MOKIHS ! A MOST favourable opportunity to the Industrions ClasseB to ensure themselves Proprietors of Land and Property—to provide against Sickness , Want , and a Poor Law Unioa—is offered to Healthy Men , in Town or Country , by joining tbe U 2 OTED PATRIOTS' BENEFIT AND CO-
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JuBtPublisbed , price 2 s . 6 d ., and sent free , " enclosed in a sealed envelope" on receipt of a Posi-offioe Order for 3 s . 6 d . MANLY VIGOUR : a Popular Inquiry into the , CONCEALED CAUSES of its PREMATURE DECLINE ; with Instructions for its COMPLETE RESTORATION , addressed to those Buffering from the Destructive Consequences of Excessive Indulgence in Solitary and Delusive Habits , Youthful Imprudence , or Infection ; including a comprehensive ! Dissertation on Marriage , with directions for the removal of Disqualifications , and Remarks on the Treatment of Ghonorrhce , Gleet , Stricture and SyphiliB . Illustrated with Cases , &o .
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TEETH . BRADFORD AND LEEDS . ME SSRS . MAJOR & CO ., Surgeon Dentists , 13 , ^ TRAFALGAR STREET , Leeds , adopt in their Practice all the recent Improvements in the Dental Art , and all Operations on the Teeth , Gums , and Palate , on those sound Surgical Principles which have gained them such extensive Patronage . Having stndied Surgery , they can with confidence undertake those difficult Operations which so often prove fatal under the hands of the mere Mechanic . Their Charges are such as to be within the means of those who are often deterred from consulting a Dentist , through the fear of Expense , and are thus driven into the hands of the unskilful or itinerant Practitioner .
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O GRIMSHAW AND CO ., 10 , Goree Piazzas , Liverpool , Despatch fine FIRST CLASS AMERICAN SHIPS * of large Tonnage , for NEW YORK and NEW { ORLEANS , every week ; and occasionally to BOSTON , PHILADELPHIA and BALTIMORE , and for QUEBEC and MONTREAL , also first : rate British Vessels to NEW SOUTH WALES and VAN DIEMANS LAND . THE "OLD" LINE OF PACKET SHIPS , ( BLACK BALL LINE , ) SAIL FROM LIVERPOOL FOR NEW YORK , Punctually on the Appointed Days , Wind permitting , New Ship MONTEZUMA , Lowber , Jan . 7 , May 7 , Sept . 7 .
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Just Published , Price 2 s . 6 d . ( Or sent free to the most remote parts of the Kingdom , in a sealed envelope , on the receipt of a post-office order for 38 . 6 d . )
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Just Published , the 12 th Edition , Price 4 s ., and sent Free to any part of tho United Kingdom on the receipt of a Post Office Order , for 5 a .
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THE CORDIAL BALM OF SYRIACUM . Is a gentlestimulant and renovator of the impaired functions of life , and is exclusively directed to the cure of the GeneratijttSystem , whether constitutional or acquired , loss offjjxual power , and debility arising from Syphilitic disease ; and is calculated to afford decided relief to those who , by early indulgence in solitary habita , have weakened the powers of their system , and fallen into a state of chronic debility , by which the constitution is left in a deplorable state , and that nervous mentality kept up which places the individual inja state of anxiety for the remainder of life . The consequences arising from this dangerous
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THE BEST MEDICINE IN THE WORLD [ i HEAP i AND JUDGE FOB 70 UHSELVES ! ! rpHE following statement , of facts has been Mn , J . municated to the Proprietors of ParrTJ LIFE PILLS :- ^ Messrs . T . Roberts and Co . Malton , Jan . 30 , 1843 . Gentlemen , —Though it is but a very short Kn , since I last wrote for a supply of Parr ' s Life Pm ^ S find that owing to an astonishing increase in th sale of them , I am again compelled to request YnnT ? send me twenty dozen of the Bmall , as also a suddI of the large size . I should wish you to forward $ 1 * by railway to York , thence by carrier , aseari T 5 possible , as I am afraid my present stock wiilb 6 ej hausted before they reach me . I enclose y < m tfc * case of a person who resides in Malton , and wh o * testimony may be relied upon as being strict ] correct . This is but one case selected from an aWst incredible number of others , which have come und » my notice , in which cures have been effected bruT use of Parr ' s Life Pills . Many highly respectabi ! persons in this neighbourhood , who previous to the introduction of Parr's Life Pills had a decided disliv t 6 Patent Medicines , are now thankful that they » able to add their testimonials to the beneficial effJf ! of these pills . By forwarding me , without delay tk quantity of pills as ordered above , you will oblige Gentlemen , youTs , respectfully , J . WRANGH AM .
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Gentlemen , —When I consider the very ow relief I have experienced from the use of Parr ' sS Pills , I think it not only to be my duty to you bat to every one who may be suffering from Bimilar com . plaints with which I have been afflicted , to m&k 6 Jn I astonishing case as public as possible . For alone time past I have been greatly troubled with a most severe nervous complaint , giddiness , and swimming in the head , which increased to such a degree tW at times I was compelled to leave off from my work being unable to bear the least fatigue or excuemem ' At the suggestion of many of my friends , I wu u
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A most extraordinary Case of Cure communicated , by Mrs . Moxon of York . Mrs . Mathers , of that City , had for many yean , been affected with a most inveterate disease , which her medical attendants pronounced to be Cancer . It originated in her breast , and continued to spread nearly all over her body , defying every effort of surgical skill . Parr's Life Pills being recommended to her , she resolved to give them a trial ; and , Bpeaking of the result , she says she cannot express the inconceivable advantage which she baa already derived from them . She further states that she is now almost well , and ascribes her convalescence solely to the persevering use of that sorereign medicine Parr ' s Life Pills .
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From Mr . R . Turner , Lewton . To Messrs . T . Roberts & Co ., Crane Court , Fleetstreet , London . Lenton , near Nottingham , Dec . 12 , 1842 . Dear Sir . —1 beg leave to tender you my warmest thanks for the great benefit which I have reciered from your valuable farr ' s Life Pills in the cure of a distressing species of fluttering , or palpitation , of the heart , which I experienced some years , and which has now , by the use of three small boxes of your invaluable medicine , entirely left me ; and indeed , I now enjoy better health and spirits than I have done for some time . Hoping you will , for , the benefit of the public at large , make my case known , I remain , Gentlemen , yours , very gratefully ,
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From F . Mattheisz , Jaffra , Ceylon . Jaffra , October 17 th , 1842 . Sir , —I beg to inform you that having undertaken tbe small supply of tbe celebrated Parr ' s Life Pills , lately received ftere from you by tbe Rev . P . Pewival , they have met with a very rapid sale , and the constantly increasing demand from every part of the province ensures to a very large extent success to
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To Messrs . T . Roberts and Co ., Proprietors of Parr ' Life Pills , Crane-Court , Fleet-street . < Jommunicated by Mr . H . Foster , Chemist , Winchester . ¦ _ East Stratton , near Winchester , Dec . 13 th , l&u . Sir , —You will remember I sent to your shop for a bottle of medicine round which was a paper containing testimonials of cures effected by the use w Parr ' s Life Pills . Amongst many others 10 f er «~ one ; a case of Rheumatism , which appearedto me similar to my own case , and seeing it so Bucces stuuy treated , simply by the use of Parr ' s Life Pills . J « - enlvari nnnn oivintr fchat invaluable medlClM >•»»»
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Parr ' s Life Pills are acknowledged to be all th&t is required to conquer disease and prolong lire * No medicine yet offered to the world e / e r sfr Wj pidly attained such distinguished celebrity ,, » . questionable if there how be any part of the clVH ~! £ world where its extraordinary healing virtues V » not been exhibited . This signal success is not ^" jL hntabln ta anv Bvatem of advertising , but SOieiy y
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KESSIK&T 02 ? POUCE -COrBT . ^ XTRAOKDINAKT < JA SB OF BIGAMY . T OnPridaya young -woman of pleasing ffppeaia ^ ee , salhez under ike miduld stature , of Mr aompbjxion , "witha-ppofnson of ihxenhair , -who -was enterec * . on the pollee-Sieet as *¦ Elizabeth Williams , aged 3 . 7 years , ieiiding in ¦ GhsK 2 Mfe * eiJ Chelsea , " was brought up l « fare Hi . G . Clive , Sis sitting magistrate , in the cns-Soay « i police constable Mount , T 12 G , charged on suspwaon cf law * stolen i silver ^ able-spoon , the TOoperty « f 2 Jr- Bifckcock , the proprietor of the < Hocester Arms Tsrecn , Gleeester-ro&a , Kensington . ¦»¦ — — '
Tire xa&h & * An *^ extraordinary disclosures made during the examka ^ on , excited the greatest interest , and the Court inta densely crowded , g Mr- mtehoodi stated , that the prisoner , accompanied |™ a jonng usan of high respectability , came to Ms tense on Sa&arday , She 27 ih tilt-, and , representing themselves ss man and ¦ wife , inquired if they could have accommodation for a few days ! Not doubting their respectability from their appearance , he told them they conld , and they took possessien- of apartments in the house . On the morning of the third day af ter-¦ warda the ( 30 th ) the young man came to him , and acknowledging that fcfcey ¦ were not man and wife , asked lunv to be a -witness to their marriage that day at Kensington Church , and produced a license for the purpose . "Witness , however , being vexed at the deception they
lad played on Kb , refused to do so , and they left the ttonsa On their return , ibont an hcnr afterwards , they prodnced to him a certificate of the marriage , and be in consequents permitted them to remain . They ¦© on&raed to zemde at Mb house tmtD Tuesday last , Tfhen the young man vrent out early in-the . morning , and did not return until dinner time . Be then inquired for his wife ( the prisoner , ) bnt she could nowhere be found on the premises , and sot returning home that sight , he the nest day examined the rooms occupied iy the parties , and missed a silver table-spoon which the prisoner had had to take some medicine in , and also a tea spoon from another took . He immediately gave information to the police , "who succeeded in apprehending her . The spoon had , however , not been found .
Mr . dive inquired if the young thrti tojwhom the prisoner had been married w = s then present ? Mr Hitchcock replied , that he was , and that he had a charge of bigamy to prefer against the prisoner . A young man was then called forward , who haTing been sworn , stated his name to be Arthur Williams , and deposed that he was a draper , at present residing at the Glocester Arms Tavern . He ' kobw the prisoner at the bar ; to whom he had been married on Tuesday , Job SOth of Hay last , by license , t& Kensington Church . Se first met her on a Snnday night in the mentb cf September last , about ten o ' clock , at Hyde-part-comer , ¦ when recognizing her as a frequent customer at a house of business with which tie -was at that tame connected , he bowed to her and spoke to her . She immediately complained to him that a gentleman who was -waiting behind her , and-whom she pointed out to witness , had
beenaniioying her , and she churned-witness ' s protection . Witness accordingly offered to see ter . home ; bnt on thtir arrival at the bottom of Cadogan-place , Sloane-Bt , she refused to allow him to accompany her farther , and they parted . He , however , persuaded her to mate an appointment to meet him again , "which she kept , and from the conversation he had -with her , he considered her a young woman of strict moral principles , and felt that she lad completely -won his affections . At their third Interview the prisoner stated to him that she was an TfaJtgTi by birth , and that her name was EiiabetU jEle&nor Burrows ; thai her father was an Englishman , who having married an Jtalian lady , had died -while she was an infant ; that -when she was between three and four years old she -was sent over to this country under the care of a Captain —— . which name he had forgotten , and placed with the captains "wife at nurse : that Captain ¦ ¦ had since died ,
and that his -widow had subsequently married a person aamed Stheridge , with whom she was still living . She also told him that -when old enough she was placed ata bosrding-school at Foofs-Cray , Sent , from which she had been subsequently taken away by her guardian , Sir "Hurry Bum , Bart , of Rose house , Dartford , Kent , who had placed her with a Mrs . Cox , residing at No . 3 , Old Manor-street , Chelsea , who had an allowance of , £ 200 per annum wiSi tec . About fomr-months since , the prisoner -wrote to Mm a letter , requesting to see him on business of importance , sad upon meeting her in the evening , she told him that the had been much annoyed £ y her guardian ; Sir Harry Dann , Bart-, pressing her to leave England with a Counte Belli van te , whom she Stated her guardian said -was a distant relative of her
{ the prisoner ' s ) mother , and in a moment of pretended confidence , she told him that both the Count and Sir Harry Darm iad made unsuccessful attempts on her Tirt J tft . . He { witness ) under * £ hes 0 f ^ T ^ nrngfofir ^^ &dvis-© d Jier to go to her old nurse , Mrs . Etberidge , -who , she bad previously told 'witness , lived in Ntdson ' a-terrace , Greenwich , -who would no doubt protect her ; but although -Kitnea offered to accompany her , she declined going there , saying that although she could not go back to Mrs . Cox ' s on account of the importunities of the Count and Baronet , she conld go to her laundress , a Mrs . Gardiner , xesidmng at So . 17 , Manor-street Witness accordingly recommended ber to do so , and she laving hinted that she had left Mts . £ ox * s in haste , *• en dx&iatn 8 £ , ~ and without any cash , he gave her 30 s .
The jQEtt day he > a-sr her at 24 x 8 . Gardiner ' s , and also snbsequenfly , "when she appeared to be so ill that he stopped at the house for two days and nights , but dnring-that time he was never for one moment alone with her . When witness -eras there , Mrs . Gardiner told T » m that she had a sister , who was the wife of a highly respectable farmer , named Bennett , residing at Henley-npon-Thames , Oxen , and asked "witness if he would like the prisoner to go down there for a week 1 Witness at first objected to being any party to such an arrangement , but the next day the prisoner pressing tie same suit , he gave her £ 2 to pay her expences . About a fortnight afterwards , he received a note from the prisoner , informing h * " » Chat she had returned to town , and was asain under the
care of Mrs . Cox , and that she had out of her pocketmoney been in the habit of paying the rent , amounting to . £ 18 , of her old nurse , 3 ba . JStheridge , which she ¦ was then unable to do , having , by leaving 3 It 3- Cox . incurred the displeasure of her guardian . The same evening , he met her , and gave her ~ £ 4 10 s . for Mrs . Btheridge ' s quarter's rent , £ 2 to pay the physician ¦ who had attended her it Mrs . Gardiner ' s , and £ 2 for her own use . About a week afterwards , she informed him thai the reason she-went back to Hrs . - Cox ' s was , ifc&ttiie Count had gone off to the Continent , and that Sir H . Ihum , her guardian , was Tery angry with her for losing a ring that lad belonged to her father , bat ¦ which , the truth was , she had taken It -with her to Mrs . Gardiner ' s , -whose husband had pledged it for 16 a ,
-without her knowledge , and he immediately gave her 18 s . to redeem it He continued after that to meet her almost daily , believing her to be still residing at Mrs . Cox ' s . "While b . B visited her at Mrs . Gardiner ' s , on « ne oecasiaE , a young man came into the room , and demanded to know what he { witness ) "wanted there ; said the prisoner was his iibe man ' s ) wife , and that his name ¦ wa s Ccx , but Jtbe prisoner persuaded witness that that was ike tnephew of her guardian , and although the ceremony of marriage had passed betwesn them at Benley-upon-Thames , it was not a valid one , inasmuch as it "wsb performed in a private house , she complying in consequence of Sir H . Dann ' B threats , but it had HBTsr been consummated ; and -witness subsequently spoke to a solicitor on the subject , who told Mm
such a mamage'was null and void . About six weeks ago she ^ represented to him that a friend of bsr father ' s lad "come from the country , a Mr . Bichardson , who -would prove that the marriage with Cox was illegal ; Imt she then admitted that the marriage had been consummated , and said that on account of the unpleasant situation in which she was consequently placed , Mr . Richardson had removed her from Mrs . Gox ?* to the house of Mr . Body , a clergyman , 31 , Church-street , Chelsea ; and about three weeks ago she told him that , notwithstanding the positive orders of Mr . Hicbardson , 2 tr . Body had admitted Cox into the honie as her hnshand . On Thursday , the 25 th alt , the prisoner again came to him apparently in great excitement' of mind ,
and said that , in consequence of Cox b&visg been admitted by Mt Body to hex room and bed , she had fisd the house , and could not return to it , and he ¦ waited about the street all that night , as he could not -getter to go into any pisca « f shelter . The next night they again walked about , and on the third night he persuaded her to enter San inn , where they sat up in a loom all Bigjit On the Saturday J 273 S ) she , however , yielded to his earnest entreaties that they shoald take lodgings untO he could procure a license to marry her , and the apartments at 'Mr Hitchcock's were conse-¦ quently taken . On the Monday he went to Mr . Brother ' s , the pariah clerk of Kansington , -who directed him ¦ where to get a license , which having been procured , SiEy -were married on the next day ( Tuesday . )
By Mr . Clive—Prisoner told me before our marriage ihafc she -was in the receipt of certain sums of mooey as pocket-money from a Mr . , a solicitor in Wel-Iwek-street , and that she was sure that when she iras married to witness . Sir H . Da nn "Would give her the £ 209 be snowed Mr . Cox for her keep , aid also the Proceeds of the rent of a house and farm , at Foot ' s-Gay her father had left her- After he had married to , she showed bin aletter she said she had received nemSii H . 3 > 3 nn , appointing to " meet witness at the
^ e ^ MsnInn , Blackheaa » , between iwelveand three <« tO 6 fcta order to « om 8 to « a arrangement , to -whack place witness -was . gone when the prisoner absconded . She also showed ban a letter addressed to "lord Segcxre , araaxne della Poretta , Milan , Italy , " whieh eon ^ nedf oar sheets of papet ^ Kch she iaid bad been ¦ written by her . guardian to his Xordship , who -was an « id friend of bjp father ' s , for flie purpose of Tnupgi ^ fng bar disiactoi ' aiia-saei ^ ucea -wSness to write a letter to his Xordship explaining the pirticulaisol hermarriare . In her vindication . sha
Mr . Clive aekeame ^ pnsonerif -wished put any gaeetion to She witneBs ? Prisoner said all she had to siy -was that » ht > tritness knew-well that she w * s a married woman , as she and her husband had both told him so . He hid , however , tiken her away wjthont her consent , and -srheu she "wanted" to go home again ie would not let her , and , therefore , she Tan away in his abience . Mount , TlSfi , praduced the certificafce of the second marriage , 'which he had found in the prisoner ' s pocket on taking her into custody . Tie certificate wa 3 signed byifce Bev . Harry Barbar , curate of Kensington , and iraa signed by the clerk and pew-opener ss ¦ witnesses
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Ti > j < 3 prisoner was described In the' cer tificate as " £ Ii > y -abeth Eleanor Burrows , gentlewoman , " and it was dated the SOthult i CaroUno Cox , of Mo . 2 < , Ebury-place , Church-Btreefc , Chelsea , produced tbe certificate of the prisoner ' s first marriage by bans , on the 26 th of February last , at St . Luke's Chelsea , to John Richard Cox , witness ' s brother . They slept together at No . 17 , Manor-street , and the next morning he -went toa situation as porter in Charles street , Grosvenor-sqoare . He , ipwevBr , came home every other Sunday , and lived with the prisoner until the last fortnight . On one occasion of coming home her brother found ilz . "Williams there ,-and turned Mm out of the bouBe . Witness had herself told Mr . Williams that the prisoner was a married woman , but he would not believe her . She bad that morning seen her brother ( the prisoner ' s first husband ) , and told Mm of the prisoner being in custody , when he said he "would attend at that court if he conld . )
Mr , Williams said the last witness had always been called to him by the name of Gardiner , and when he accompanied the officer , Mount , to apprehend the prisoner , they with difficulty traced | her to tie house In Ebury-place kept by Mrs . Cox , the mother of the first husband , which female he found to be the same woman he had known as Mrs . Gardiner . \ Mr . dive told tbe -witness Gardiner she would be very lucky if she escaped , being also charged , as he had no doubt the whole parties had been engaged in a deep conspiracy to entrap Mr . Williams . He had great donbt whether the whole ought not to be Indicted . The prisoner , -who had fainted during tbe hearing of the voluminous evidence , and been removed into the yard of the court , was then brought in , and again placed at ihe bar . She appeared in a very weak state , and covered her face with her hands .
The formal depositions having been read over to her , in answer to a question if she had anything to say -which she wished to be taken down in writing , she replied that she had nothing to say . She was then fully committed to Newgate for triaL
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t THE NORTHERN STAR . ^__ -- — - ¦¦ — . — j-v - » - - ¦ - ¦ ¦ .. ¦ - ¦; ¦ ::. ' * ¦ ; ¦¦¦ ¦¦¦ - — ¦ - -= ^>
West Riding Of Y0rk5hire.
WEST RIDING OF Y 0 RK 5 HIRE .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), June 17, 1843, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct486/page/2/
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